WND

New legal strategy considered threat to Facebook

Social media company 'may pay through its digital nose'

Facebook quickly grew into a massive social media presence worth billions of dollars, with some 2 billions users.

But it’s come under fire in the past couple of years for selling users’ information, allowing Russians to buy ads to influence the 2016 election, allowing Democrats to pull a similar stunt in a 2017 special election, censoring conservative speech and much more.

Now there could be legal trouble for CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his company.

The Hollywood Reporter reports a prosecutor in Illinois has outsourced to a private lawyer the enforcement of the state’s consumer protection law in a class-action lawsuit against Facebook alleging unfair and deceptive conduct.

Attorney Jay Edelson is representing the people of Illinois through an arrangement with Kimberly Foxx, the state’s attorney in Cook County.

Edelson now is a special assistant state’s attorney, appointed to punish Facebook for allegedly violating the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act.

Under the law, a company could be fined $50,000 in civil penalties per violation and lose its business license.

It’s all fallout from the revelation that the British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica used harvested data from Facebook users to try to swing the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

Edelson’s court filing against Facebook alleges: “This kind of mass data collection was not only allowed but encouraged by Facebook, which sought to keep developers building on its platform and provide companies with all the tools they need to influence and manipulate user behavior. That’s because Facebook is not a social media company; it is the largest data-mining operation in existence.”

The report said that in addition to the many lawsuits filed over Cambridge Analytica, lawmakers “have expressed outrage that Facebook hasn’t taken user privacy seriously enough.”

“And millions of consumers have decided to ditch the platform. But Edelson’s lawsuit is notable — and not just for what the complaint says and the prospect that Facebook may pay through its digital nose,” the report said.

Victory could prompt more lawsuits and even federal legislation.

Facebook’s lawyers claim the case “is being directed and financed by private attorneys with no accountability to the state or Illinois voters, pursuant to a contract of questionable validity that awards them a significant contingent interest in any recovery.”

The impact of the case could be widespread

“What Edelson’s case portends is politically connected plaintiffs’ lawyers working hand in hand with local regulators and testing out new legislation coming from the progressive quarters of the nation. These sorts of partnerships, sure to raise constitutional challenges, threaten to become disruptive to companies that once made disruption a key part of their own missions. That could well become the incentive for goliaths like Facebook to get behind new federal legislation if only to preempt states like Illinois and California taking an even more punitive approach to privacy breaches. Already, the tech lobby has begun its push. It’s not out of generosity. The goal is to supersede what’s happening stateside,” the report said.

Facebook already has lost a third of its value, and Zuckerberg, had to testify to Congress.

Among issues that may come up are Facebook’s agreements that “reportedly allowed companies like Amazon and Sony to surreptitiously obtain users’ names, emails and contact information and might have technically allowed other companies including Netflix and Spotify to read users’ private messages (even if there is no evidence that this actually happened or even that Facebook’s partners were aware of such powers).”

Edelson told the Hollywood Reporter: “The way that defendants deal with privacy cases is to try to get them kicked out on technical grounds so there is never any discovery. So when they argue, ‘There’s no standing. There’s no damages,’ their goal is to never get to discovery. But when regulators bring suit, it’s hard for them to have that silver bullet in the beginning.”

He even has a backup plan.

“He’s currently pursuing Facebook on another front — alleging in a separate case that the social media giant violated the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, a first-in-the-nation state statute that governs the collection and storage of fingerprints, facial scans and other bodily identifiers,” the report said.